After a campaign that already feels like it’s in day 427, it’s nice to finally have some unknowns sorted.

The cheeky, lame and sometimes hilarious tradition of naming the campaign buses is done. In at least one case it was decided by popular opinion — in another the journalists and party are agreeing to disagree.

The results:

The Care-avan vs. Scare-avan

The Folks Wagon

The Proletariat Chariot

The Lean Green Machine

The Ontario Liberals have called their campaign bus the Care-avan. The journalists following in the Liberal’s media bus have called it the Scare-avan. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

Sticking with their “care over cuts” theme, the Liberals called their bus the “Care-avan.” That was quickly turned on its head by the journalists in the bus trailing Wynne’s who are going with “Scare-avan.”

The new name is a play on the Liberals’ attempts to scare voters away from a possible Ford government.

Meantime, while journalists aren’t welcome, it seems everyone else is being beckoned to the Tory bus. The Progressive Conservative campaign is poking fun at Ford’s abundant use of the word “folks,” by naming its bus the “Folks Wagon.”

Possibly in a sign that he got the message, Ford has switched out “folks” for “friends” in his recent stump speeches.

With no place for journalists on the PC bus, the Toronto Star and QP Briefing teamed up on a rental to follow the campaign around. The Dodge Journey SUV has been dubbed the “Ford Dodger.”

The Ontario Tories have dubbed their 2018 campaign bus the Folks Wagon. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Tara Walton